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Showing 121 to 135 of 193 results Save | Export
McGill Univ., Montreal (Quebec). McLennan Library. – 1986
Brief annotations accompany the 104 entries in this bibliography which emphasizes sources for ethnological research about Native peoples of Canada dating from 1913 to 1985. Materials reflecting concerns of social anthropology and historical approaches to the study of Native peoples are also included, but linguistics and archaeology are covered…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian History, American Indian Literature, American Indians
Inter-Tribal Council of Nevada, Reno. – 1974
Among the native peoples who occupied the western Great Basin were a great many outstanding personalities. Various types of leaders, referred to as "headmen" or "talkers," as well as medicine men, religious leaders, and artists, played very significant roles in the history of this area. The social organization of the Western…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian History, American Indians, Biographies
Cunningham, Maggi – 1979
Born in 1767, Black Hawk was the last great war leader of the Sauk Indians, who lived in the Rock River valley in Illinois. By age 25, he was a famed warrior and leader of his people who raided neighboring tribes until a period of peace and prosperity began about 1800. Various treaties of which the Sauk knew and understood very little deprived the…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Reservations, American Indians, Biographies
Johnson, R. P. – 1974
Written for children in grades 5-9, this biography of the Nez Perce leader, Chief Joseph, describes the conflict between the Nez Perce American Indian tribe and the United States government, known as the Nez Perce War of 1877. Describing the 1,700 mile retreat of those Nez Perce who refused to surrender their lands to white settlers, ranchers, and…
Descriptors: American Indian Reservations, American Indians, Anglo Americans, Biographies
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Benton, Sherrole – Tribal College, 1995
Provides the author's reflections on Native American history and the story of Pocahontas, who in the Colonial United States saved John Smith from being beheaded and adopted European ways. Highlights problems with the historical record, including the lack of information on and perspectives from Native Americans in history books. (MAB)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian History, American Indians, Biographies
Minneapolis Public Schools, MN. – 1979
A biography for elementary school students presents an account of an American Indian television reporter, Tom Beaver (Creek), and includes a map of Oklahoma showing the location of Indian tribes. A teacher's guide following the biography contains information about the Creek tribe and the history of television, learning objectives and directions…
Descriptors: American Indian Studies, American Indians, Biographies, Career Awareness
Archuleta, Carlos – 1972
Half Pueblo and half white, a young man grew up in the Taos Pueblo, made contributions to his Indian people, and decided to work as a mental health professional. Having grown up learning the Indian ways, the young man accepted his heritage and pursued a college education in Social Work after working as a teacher's aide at the Pueblo Day School,…
Descriptors: Achievement Need, Alcoholism, American Indian Education, American Indians
Miller, Hubert J. – 1972
The conquest and colonization of Mexico initiated by Hernan Cortes resulted in the fusion of the Indian and Hispanic cultures. This fusion led to the "mestizo" culture. Cortes was the bearer of the Hispanic heritage just as the Aztecs and other Indians in Mexico and the Southwest were the carriers of the Indian heritage. In studying the…
Descriptors: American Indians, Biographies, Cultural Background, Cultural Interrelationships
Stensland, Anna Lee – 1975
American culture differs from British culture largely due to the historical relationship of the European-American with the Native American. Some contributions of the American Indian culture include state names (Tennessee, Massachusetts, Delaware, and Connecticut), city names (Omaha, Yankton, Yakima, and Peorial), political concepts from the League…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, American Indians, Biographies, Characterization
Johnson, Robert Proctor – 1973
Osceola was the guiding spirit and moving force behind the Second Seminole War. In 1830, when it became the official policy of the United States government to move all the Eastern Indians to a new Indian Territory west of the Mississippi River, the Seminoles resisted. Under Osceola's leadership, a thousand Seminole warriors held off the entire…
Descriptors: American History, American Indian Reservations, American Indians, Biographies
Kostich, Dragos D. – 1976
As 1 in a series of 24 American Indian biographies written for youth at the secondary level, this book details the social and professional development of George Morrison, an internationally known American Indian artist, who was born in a small Chippewa community in Northern Minnesota (1919) and began teaching art and American Indian Studies at the…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, American Indian Culture, American Indians, Art Expression
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Ballinger, Franchot – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 1984
Emphasizes that a Native American literature course is best taught as a criticism of the literature, not as ethnography. Outlines a literature course covering: (1) principles of the oral tradition; (2) tribal experiences in the oral tradition; (3) Native American biography/autobiography; and (4) contemporary American Indian writers. (JHZ)
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, American Indian Studies, American Indians, Biographies
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Harvey, Karen D. – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 1992
Offers a list of books for teachers and children about Christopher Columbus and the consequences of 1492. Suggests that teachers need to relearn the Columbus story to avoid the myths and biased texts of the past. Includes the American Indian perspective of the discoveries, original materials, and biological and cultural consequences. (DK)
Descriptors: American Indian History, American Indians, Biographies, Change Agents
Szasz, Margaret Connell, Ed. – 1994
During the five centuries of contact between Native and non-Native peoples of the Americas, thousands of intermediaries have moved across the continents' cultural frontiers. These cultural brokers have included traders, missionaries, persons of mixed race, diplomats, Indian schoolchildren attending missionary or government boarding schools, White…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Alaska Natives, American Indian Education, American Indian History
Kehoe, Alice B. – 1982
Among Indian groups of the Northwestern Plains (Blackfoot, Plains Cree, Dakota, Plains Ojibwa), older persons are respected for the spiritual power they have obtained. Differences exist between the several ethnic groups, but in general they assume that attainment of maturity and then old age proves spiritual power and makes the elder a proper…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian Education, American Indians, Biographies
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